The Missouri University of Science and Technology Alumna and Woman Student of the Year Committee announced its 2014 award winners during a ceremony held on campus Oct. 13. This year the committee honored three women students who are dedicated to advancing the lives of women and committed to diversity.
Read More »Local residents who enjoy learning about other cultures are invited to connect with Missouri University of Science and Technology’s international community through the university’s International Friends Program.
Read More »Twenty-seven faculty members at Missouri University of Science and Technology received promotions or tenure effective Sept. 1.
Read More »Eleven students at Missouri University of Science and Technology have been nominated by student organizations to compete for the title of 2014 Homecoming Queen.
Read More »Eleven students at Missouri University of Science and Technology have been nominated by student organizations to compete for the title of 2014 Homecoming King.
Read More »A string quartet featuring students from Missouri University of Science and Technology recently provided music for the U.S. Army Military Police School’s “Commandant’s Community Leader Social.”
Read More »Amy Ketterer, a senior in technical communication at Missouri University of Science and Technology, has been awarded the Diane Feldman Technical Editing Special Interest Group Scholarship from the Society for Technical Communications.
Read More »The Senegal St. Joseph Gospel Choir, founded over 40 years ago in Senegal, will perform at Missouri University of Science and Technology this month. It is the second performance in the 2014-2015 Missouri S&T Campus Performing Arts Series.
Read More »Missouri University of Science and Technology is one of 15 schools selected by the Anita Borg Institute (ABI), a nonprofit organization focused on advancing women in computing, and Harvey Mudd College to participate in a new program designed to increase the percentage of undergraduate computer science majors who are female or students of color.
Read More »All spacecraft that operate in low-earth orbit, like the International Space Station, are subject to high-speed impacts by orbital space junk – projectiles that can travel at speeds of 18,000 miles per hour, says Dr. William Schonberg, chair of civil, architectural and environmental engineering at Missouri University of Science and Technology.
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